News

Five 'Critical' Patches Planned for Tuesday

After some comparatively light patch rollouts in past months, Microsoft's April Patch Tuesday promises a fuller slate with eight security bulletins.

After some comparatively light patch rollouts in past months, Microsoft's April Patch Tuesday promises a fuller slate with eight security bulletins. Five are rated "critical" and two "important," with one rare "moderate" patch.

This month's round of security updates may have the most girth of any since October. The rollout is expected to include hotfixes for Windows programs and services, DirectX, and ubiquitous Microsoft applications such as Internet Explorer (IE), Excel and Word. All of the critical items have remote code execution implications. The important items are designed to stop two instances of elevation-of-privilege incursions. Finally, the moderate patch protects against denial-of-service attacks.

Critical Fixes
The first critical bulletin is described as a Windows fix and affects Windows 2000, XP and Windows Server 2003. Meanwhile, the second critical Windows patch touches on all supported Windows client and server OSes.

The third critical fix deals with the DirectX versions 8.1 and 9.0 running on Windows 2000, XP and Windows Server 2003. DirectX consists of application programming interfaces used for multimedia on Windows-based PCs, including game, video and audio applications.

The fourth critical fix expected on Tuesday will update IE versions 5.01, 6 and 7 running on Windows 2000, XP and Vista, as well as Windows Server 2003 and Windows Server 2008. IE has been at the center of recent hacker activity affecting older versions of the browser, plus the recent IE 8.

The fifth critical bulletin to come will fix Excel, affecting Microsoft Office 2000, 2003, 2007 and XP, along with Office 2004 and 2008 for Macs. Security analysts speculate that this Excel fix could be related to a hole in the popular spreadsheet app for which Microsoft issued a security advisory in February. That advisory warned users that exploits were in the wild, potentially affecting all supported versions of Excel.

Important and Moderate Items
The first important fix for this month will pertain to Microsoft's Distributed Transaction Coordinator (MSDTC). The MSDTC is a Windows-based administrative tool that acts as a conduit for information and commands passed over the network via resource managers, SQL Server databases and various other file systems. This fix updates the MSDTC facility program across every supported Windows OS. It's designed to block hackers from infiltrating a system and upping their administrative privileges to change MSDTC configurations, Microsoft says.

The second important fix will affect Microsoft's Forefront Edge Security platform and the Internet Security and Acceleration (ISA) Server. ISA is a server application deployed to stave off malware and firewall-compromising attacks. This fix is supposed to deflect a denial-of-service onslaught where hackers can change access control parameters and lock enterprise administrators out of these programs.

Finally, the lone moderate item in the rollout will affect all Windows OSes and is designed to circumvent elevation-of-privilege attacks.

All of the eight patches may require restarts.

IT pros interested in nonsecurity updates channeled through Windows Update, Microsoft Update and Windows Server Updates can find support in this Knowledge Base article. It provides guidance on IE 8 system updates, along with junk-mail filter upgrades and malicious software removal tool tweaks.

About the Author

Jabulani Leffall is an award-winning journalist whose work has appeared in the Financial Times of London, Investor's Business Daily, The Economist and CFO Magazine, among others.

comments powered by Disqus

Featured

  • Creating Business Applications Using Blazor

    Expert Blazor programmer Michael Washington' will present an upcoming developer education session on building high-performance business applications using Blazor, focusing on core concepts, integration with .NET, and best practices for development.

  • GitHub Celebrates Microsoft's 50th by 'Vibe Coding with Copilot'

    GitHub chose Microsoft's 50th anniversary to highlight a bevy of Copilot enhancements that further the practice of "vibe coding," where AI does all the drudgery according to human supervision.

  • AI Coding Assistants Encroach on Copilot's Special GitHub Relationship

    Microsoft had a great thing going when it had GitHub Copilot all to itself in Visual Studio and Visual Studio Code thanks to its ownership of GitHub, but that's eroding.

  • VS Code v1.99 Is All About Copilot Chat AI, Including Agent Mode

    Agent Mode provides an autonomous editing experience where Copilot plans and executes tasks to fulfill requests. It determines relevant files, applies code changes, suggests terminal commands, and iterates to resolve issues, all while keeping users in control to review and confirm actions.

  • Windows Community Toolkit v8.2 Adds Native AOT Support

    Microsoft shipped Windows Community Toolkit v8.2, an incremental update to the open-source collection of helper functions and other resources designed to simplify the development of Windows applications. The main new feature is support for native ahead-of-time (AOT) compilation.

Subscribe on YouTube